Prince of Wales visits RAF Valley

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government

His Royal Highness The Duke of Cambridge, Flight Lieutenant William Wales, shows his father, His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales, his 'office' - the cockpit of an RAF Sea King Search and Rescue helicopter [Picture: Senior Aircraftwoman Faye Storer, Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

The Prince of Wales arrived by air to take a tour of the base and see his son, Flight Lieutenant William Wales, in his place of work.

After being welcomed by Group Captain Adrian Hill, Station Commander of RAF Valley, Prince Charles, who is the Honorary Air Commodore of RAF Valley, was given an update on RAF Valley matters, after which the Prince set off for the far side of the airfield to see his son, who was on shift as part of C Flight, 22 Squadron.

However, just as the royal entourage departed from station headquarters the scramble bell sounded at C Flight. A hill walker had fallen badly on Cader Idris some 3,000 feet (900m) up in the Welsh mountains.

The RAF Valley duty Search and Rescue (SAR) helicopter and crew were tasked to find and retrieve the casualty and take him to Aberystwyth Hospital for treatment.

His Royal Highness The Prince of Wales is welcomed to RAF Valley by Group Captain Adrian Hill, the Station Commander, and Warrant Officer Dave Hegarty, the Station Warrant Officer [Picture: Corporal Pete Devine, Crown Copyright/MOD 2012]

With the Prince of Wales only minutes away, the C Flight Commander, Squadron Leader Alex Brassington, took over as the Sea King’s Operational Captain, thereby allowing Flight Lieutenant Wales to remain behind to greet and escort his father on a short private visit.

The benchmark for the award of Operational Captaincy is necessarily set high - everyone hoping to attain this distinction has to meet the required standards so we can deliver a 24-hours-a-day SAR service over every day of the year.

During the 30-minute visit, Flight Lieutenant Wales showed Prince Charles his ‘office’ - namely the pilot’s cockpit of another Sea King helicopter. He also learned all about RAF Valley’s area of Search and Rescue responsibility before spending some private time alone with his son.